Category: Main Page

Seattle weekend: Recycling bikes and mustache bike ride

With only a “chance” of rain this weekend, you might enjoy loading a container with bicycles on Saturday and a mustache bike ride this Sunday. Both are free.

The Village Bicycle Project is loading a shipping container headed to Ghana beginning at 9 a.m. Saturday at Total Reclaim, 1915 South Corgiat Drive. Here are the directions to the loading event.

For all of you who let your whiskers grow under your nose for Movember, Go Means Go is sponsoring a Free Mustache Ride on Sunday …

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/12/03/seattle-weekend-recycling-bikes-and-mustache-bike-ride/

Update: Watch “Man Zou: Beijing to Shanghai” bicycle-tour film for free

Update: Dec. 3, 2010 — The documentary about four Americans and a Chinese guide who take a 1,000-mile bike tour across China is available for free online viewing through Jan. 2.

The 1-1/2-hour film, “Man Zou: Beijing to Shanghai,” made its television premier Thursday night on Seattle's local PBS outlet, KCTS (Channel 9).

Watching the broadcast, I was reminded time and again how bicycle travel is the best way to learn about an area and its people.

The four Americans saw first-hand the contrasts of big-city wealth and rural poverty in the country. They also experienced the side effects of a growing economy …

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/12/03/update-watch-man-zou-beijing-to-shanghai-bicycle-tour-film-for-free/

The pain of the climb in Pittburgh's Dirty Dozen bike ride

The Pittsburgh Dirty Dozen bicycle ride speaks to many, and it says “Granny Gears.”

The annual bike ride takes place the day after Thanksgiving and tackles 13 of the steepest climbs in the city over a 50-mile course.

While many of the slopes are rated at a 25% grade, the steepest is the cobblestoned Canton Avenue. It's only a tenth of a mile long, but it rises at a 37% grade in that distance.

Aren't you sorry that you missed that? Now you can see all the pain and suffering of cyclists struggling uphill in a newly released DVD entitled “Pittsburgh Dirty Dozen.” …..

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/12/02/the-pain-of-the-climb-in-pittburghs-dirty-dozen-bike-ride/

Municipal judge upholds Black Hawk bicycle ban

The bicycle ban imposed on most city streets in the small gambling town of Black Hawk, Colorado, is legal, according to a municipal court judge.

The ruling means that the three ticketed bicyclists who fought their tickets in court, with the help of pro bono attorneys and the nonprofit Bicycle Colorado, will probably either pay their fines or appeal the cases.

Bicycle Colorado announced the judge's decision on Wednesday.

Black Hawk city council enacted a law in 2009 to make it possible to ban bicycles on certain streets for safety reasons. Early in 2010, the city erected “no bicycling” signs on nearly every street in town and police started issuing $68 tickets …..

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/12/02/municipal-judge-upholds-black-hawk-bicycle-ban/

Green energy advocate traveling by trike to Washington DC

When renewable energy advocate Tom Weis decided to start a national dialogue about US energy policies, he set out on a 2,500-mile journey to Washington DC by hybrid electric trike.

Along the way, the Boulder, Colorado, resident has been talking to people he meets along the road and to children at school assemblies. (Check out the Q&A with students at Mason Intermediate School in Ohio.)

Like many others, Weis has found that pedaling along in an essentially human-powered vehicle is a great conversation starter.

That's especially the case when the vehicle is a rocket-like trike with a canary-yellow carbon fiber shell. It sports a small electric motor to help him get the loaded 150-pound rig over the mountains ….

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/12/01/green-energy-advocate-traveling-by-trike-to-washington-dc/

Honoring the BFUs — bicycle-friendly universities

Some 150 communities have been honored as “bicycle-friendly” by the League of American Bicyclists, but there is just one institution of higher learning — Stanford University — on that entire list.

While the home cities of UC-Davis, left, University of Michigan (Ann Arbor), University of Colorado (Boulder) and others are bike friendly, the campuses themselves don't have such designations.

The League wants to award the efforts of college campuses that already are bicycle-friendly and help others adopt practices that improve the health and well-being of students.

The League is launching a Bike-Friendly University program …

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/11/30/honoring-the-bfus-bicycle-friendly-universities/

New website and videos from bike traveler Heinz Stucke

If there's a living legend of bicycle touring, it's Heinz Stucke, the world's ultimate bike traveler.

Born in 1940, the cyclist has been pedaling down the road for 48 years after leaving his hometown of Hovelhoff, Germany, on a 3-speed bicycle.

Nearly 370,000 miles later, Stucke has visited more than 200 nations and territories and he's still going strong. Most recently, he completed a 6,000-mile tour Brazil and Alaska on his Brompton folding bike.

Now, in conjuncton with Bike-Tech, which sells Brompton folding bicycles, Stucke has launched a new website and a series of videos ….

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/11/29/new-website-and-videos-from-bike-traveler-heinz-stucke/

Jimmy Button shares his miracle on cross-country bicycle tour

Next time you need inspiration for riding your bicycle, consider the case of Jimmy Button.

In 2000, the 26-year-old veteran motorcycle racer suffered a paralyzing crash in a practice round at a race course in San Diego. Family and friends were told that he was paralyzed from the neck down and would probably never walk again.

In three months, however, he'll set off for a cross-country bike ride from that race course in San Diego:

“The last time I rode an ambulance out. … But I'm not going to ride an ambulance out of that place this time, I'm going to ride a bicycle, and when we stop it's going to be when we get to Daytona Beach ….

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/11/28/jimmy-button-shares-his-miracle-on-cross-country-bicycle-tour/

Recycled-bicycle Christmas tree

If you're looking for the best bicycle-themed holiday display this year you might need to go to Australia.

A shopping area in Sydney has created a 23-foot Christmas tree fashioned out of 100 recycled bicycles.

Built by the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority, the tree was assembled from bicycles collected by the CMA Recycling. It took about eight weeks to design and build.

Sydney's tree has been made from recycled chairs in 2008 and green bottles in 2009. This year, the bicycle frames were painted a bright green, while the wheel rims got splashed …

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/11/27/recycled-bicycle-christmas-tree/

Chef takes his job on the road by bicycle

Louisville bicycling SoupByCycle soup chef Ian Ritchie is on the mend after a motorist hit him from behind at a stoplight last week.

Ritchie says he didn't suffer life threatening injuries, but he'll take a couple of weeks to recover before getting his mobile soup kitchen back on the road.

That's got to be good news for his ever-growing clientele, who may soon tire of their own attempts at turkey-leftover soup after Thanksgiving ….

Continue reading

Permanent link to this article: https://www.bikingbis.com/2010/11/26/chef-takes-his-job-on-the-road-by-bicycle/